| Literature DB >> 31999716 |
Vanessa Charland-Verville1, Demetrius Ribeiro de Paula1,2,3, Charlotte Martial1, Helena Cassol1, Georgios Antonopoulos1, Blaine Alexander Chronik2,3, Andrea Soddu2,3, Steven Laureys1.
Abstract
The notion that death represents a passing to an afterlife, where we are reunited with loved ones and live eternally in a utopian paradise, is common in the reports of people who have encountered a "Near-Death Experience" (NDE). NDEs are thoroughly portrayed by the media but empirical studies are rather recent. The definition of the phenomenon as well as the identification of NDE experiencers is still a matter of debate. To date, NDEs' identification and description in studies have mostly derived from answered items in questionnaires. However, questionnaires' content could be restricting and subject to personal interpretation. We believe that in addition to their use, user-independent statistical text examination of freely expressed NDEs narratives is of prior importance to help capture the phenomenology of such a subjective and complex phenomenon. Towards that aim, we included 158 participants with a firsthand retrospective narrative of their self-reported NDE that we analyzed using an automated text-mining method. The output revealed the top words expressed by experiencers. In a second step, a hierarchical clustering analysis was conducted to visualize the relationships between these words. It revealed three main clusters of features: visual perceptions, emotions and spatial components. We believe the user-independent and data-driven text mining approach used in this study is promising by contributing to the building a rigorous description and definition of NDEs.Entities:
Year: 2020 PMID: 31999716 PMCID: PMC6992169 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0227402
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Fig 1Overview of text classification procedure for characterization of NDE narratives.
Sample’s demographics and NDEs’ contexts of occurrence (N = 158).
| Demographics | NDE contexts | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Anoxia (n = 53) | Trauma (n = 30) | Other medical cause (n = 64) | No medical cause (n = 11) | |
| Gender—female | 24 (45%) | 14 (47%) | 37 (58%) | 8 (73%) |
| Age at NDE (mean in years ± SD) | 43±17 | 25±13 | 31±15 | 41±11 |
| Time since NDE | 14±13 | 28±11 | 23±15 | 19±13 |
Fig 2The 30 most frequent words/features in documents/experiencers’ narratives (N = 158).
Fig 3Dendrogram representing the hierarchical clustering of the most reported words (n = 30).